BLURR wrote:Logged my 1,000th running mile for the year this morning. Hoping to hit 1,200 by the end of the year.

Congrats. I run 10-15 miles a week only so I've just gone past 500. I used to track them on DailyMile but grew tired of having to post it, so now I just run as long and as far as I want, and listen to some tunes or podcasts. Rarely I'll wear my GPS watch.

I hear ya on the treadmill. I hate having to run on those damn things, but sometimes do have to settle for that. Been logging 5-10 miles M-F since the beginning of the year. I have to wage war some mornings to get my ass out of bed, but after that first mile is done, I am in cruising mode for the rest of it. I use mapmyrun to get my distances for my various routes and then I just switch it up from day to day. Some routes are flat, some are hilly, and a little bit of everything in between. If you want to feel lighter on your feet when on the tee pad, I highly recommend getting some jogging/running in.

Today marks 2 years of accepting a fitness/weight loss wager with a former coworker of mine. Two years ago I was tipping the scales at 262 and steadily climbing. I am proud to say that this morning I weighted in at 194 and feeling pretty damn good. Disc Golf has become a joy again because I am not carrying the equivalent of a small child around the course anymore.

Congratulations! I've lost 8 kilos from this time last year and made my post injury longest bike ride yesterday. With snow on the ground I'm looking forward to getting into even better shape and being able to ride on higher gears with less friction on the ground. I'm bound to lose more weight

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

BLURR wrote:Today marks 2 years of accepting a fitness/weight loss wager with a former coworker of mine. Two years ago I was tipping the scales at 262 and steadily climbing. I am proud to say that this morning I weighted in at 194 and feeling pretty damn good. Disc Golf has become a joy again because I am not carrying the equivalent of a small child around the course anymore.

Congrats! Very impressive.

Unfortunately life seems to be a zero sum game and I know where the weight you lost went to.

BLURR wrote:Today marks 2 years of accepting a fitness/weight loss wager with a former coworker of mine. Two years ago I was tipping the scales at 262 and steadily climbing. I am proud to say that this morning I weighted in at 194 and feeling pretty damn good. Disc Golf has become a joy again because I am not carrying the equivalent of a small child around the course anymore.

Congrats! Very impressive.

Unfortunately life seems to be a zero sum game and I know where the weight you lost went to.

My recipe was and is to eat less, especially meat but more sallad and drinking protein to not lose muscle mass and controlling hunger with chia seeds at times. Chia probably shouldn't be used all the time because it prevents some parts of food from getting into the blood stream. While it helps in limiting the energy you get from the food it might also create deficiencies if it is overdone. Naturally more training has helped too. I'd try my hand at HIT. High intensity training. For example 20 second spurt at resistance with a gym bike then pausing and repeating three times at full power. Three times a week plus whatever you were doing previously. When you progress 30 seconds for 5 times was the recommendation by Finnish researchers on Finnish TV program Prisma studio a couple of weeks ago. The initial training takes only 12 minutes per month! You can do it can't you. you might not even sweat at all. Perfect for busy professionals. You could exercise during lunch break in your work clothes and save time for fun outside of work instead of working out then.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

I added in a 30 minute HITT program a few weeks ago, in addition to my morning run and it has helped strengthen my core a ton. I played a round of disc a few weeks back and could feel the difference when throwing 80%-90% power. It seems as though my distance has gone up by about 20-30 feet. With it being early in the season, I can't wait to see how it goes once I am able to throw regularly without snow on the pads.

BLURR wrote:Today marks 2 years of accepting a fitness/weight loss wager with a former coworker of mine. Two years ago I was tipping the scales at 262 and steadily climbing. I am proud to say that this morning I weighted in at 194 and feeling pretty damn good. Disc Golf has become a joy again because I am not carrying the equivalent of a small child around the course anymore.

Nobody can do high intensity training active part for 30 minutes at the best possible power generation level. So does that 30 minutes include the rest periods? How long, how many reps and how long a rest period does your HIT routine include? I've noticed less leg fatigue and a a possible minor increase in the ease of breathing and a certain lengthened ability to sustain aerobic exercise. From a few months of different variations of HIT.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

I've not done that much upper body HIT yet but have dabbled with it testing what my body can handle. If i've read correctly between the lines masterbeato does some sort of HIT version at least for the upper body.

Flat shots need running on the center line of the tee and planting each step on the center line. Anhyzer needs running from rear right to front left with the plant step hitting the ground to the left of the line you're running on. Hyzer is the mirror of that.

I'll have to post my routines for my workouts and eating habits when i have more time.

Last year around November I weighed 138lbs. Now I weight 165lbs. I'm 5' 8"

It's a pretty intense workout I do. I divide the workouts into different muscle groups. One month I'll be lifting just a little bit heavy then the next month I'm lifting a little bit lighter to give my body time to recover from the last month.

this is just a basic rundown of how I divide the workouts. It's a bit different than what you are use to seeing. I do both pulling movements one day then do all pushing movement the day after next.

The plank with lateral raise, pushup with row and single leg RDL seem like pretty good DG exercises. It seems to hit your shoulders pretty hard and while I used to have aching issues with my throwing arm rotator cuff, I haven't experienced them at all since I started it.

Now I'm just doing a full body workout using compound lifts with my Powerblocks and Swiss ball three times a week and cardio two times a week. I always warm up before and stretch afterwards.